Bonnie Jo Stufflebeam is an American author of fantasy fiction active since 2012.[1] According to Stufflebeam, her last name "might mean 'stump leg' ... or 'one who resides behind a stump'," characterizing both as "somewhat accurate."[2]
Biography
Stufflebeam is a native of Texas, where she currently resides after two years in Oregon. She received an MFA in creative writing from the University of Southern Maine in July 2013. She coordinates the annual Arts & Words Collaborative Show in Fort Worth, Texas.[2]
"He Came from a Place of Openness and Truth" (2015)
"Nostalgia" (2015)
"Everything Beneath You" (2015)
"Blight" (2015)
"Six Ways to Break Her" (2015)
"Doors" (2015)
"Trickier with Each Translation" (2015)
"The Girl with Golden Hair" (2015)
"The Devil's Hands" (2015)
"Sisters" (2015)
"Sleeping with Spirits" (2015)
"A Careful Fire" (2015)
"Something Deadly, Something Dark" (2016)
"The Orangery" (2016)
"The Maneaters" (2017)
"Needle Mouth" (2017)
"Secret Keeper" (2017)
"Ghost Town" (2017)
"The Black Thumb" (2017)
"The Greatest Discovery of Dr. Madeline Lightfoot" (2017)
"Angry Kings" (2018)
"So Easy" (2018)
"The Men Who Come from Flowers" (2018)
"The Crow Knight" (2018)
Poetry
"The Werewolf" (2013)
"Strange Monster" (2013)
"Kites" (2014)
"The Santa Monica Prophecies: A Collaborative Triptych" (with Layla Al-Bedawi, Holly Lyn Walrath, 2017)
Nonfiction
"Stepping Through a Portal" (2014)
"A World of Queer Imagination" (2015)
"Best Short Fiction of 2014" (2015)
"Editorial: Braving the Post-Apocalyptic Landscape" (Interzone no. 276, 2018)
Awards
"Everything Beneath Your" received an honorable mention for the 2015 James Tiptree Jr. Award.[1][2] "The Orangery" was nominated for the 2017 Nebula Award for Best Novelette.[1][2] She has also placed or been short- or long-listed for the 2016 Selected Shorts/Electric Lit Stella Kupferberg Memorial Short Story Prize, the 2015 British Science Fiction Association Awards, the 2016 Texas Observer Short Story Contest, and the 2015 Doctor T. J. Eckleburg Review's Gertrude Stein Award in Fiction.[2]